Publication Type
Journal Article
Journal Name
Behavioural Processes
Publication Date
5-1-2017
Abstract
Evarcha culicivora, an East African salticid spider, is a mosquito specialist and it is also a plant specialist, with juveniles visiting plants primarily for acquiring nectar meals and adults visiting plants primarily as mating sites. The hypothesis we consider here is that there are ontogenetic shifts in cognition-related responses by E. culicivora to plant odour. Our experiments pertain to cross-modality priming effects in three specific contexts: executing behaviour that we call the ‘visual inspection of plants’ (Experiment 1), adopting selective visual attention to specific visual targets (Experiment 2) and becoming prepared to respond rapidly to specific visual targets (Experiment 3). Our findings appear not to be a consequence of salient odours in general elevating E. culicivora's motivation to respond to salient visual stimuli. Instead, effects were specific to particular odours paired with particular visual targets, with the salient volatile plant compounds being caryophyllene and humulene. We found evidence that prey odour primes juveniles and adults to respond to seeing specifically prey, mate odour primes adults to respond to seeing specifically mates and plant odour primes juveniles to respond to seeing specifically flowers. However, plant odour appears to prime adults to respond to seeing specifically a mate associated with a plant.
Keywords
Cross-modality priming, Evarcha culicivora, Lantana camara, Salticidae, Selective attention, Spider
PubMed ID
28245979
Recommended Citation
Carvell, G., Jackson, R., & Cross, F. (2017). Ontogenetic shift in plant-related cognitive specialization by a mosquito-eating predator. Behavioural Processes, 138, 105-122. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.beproc.2017.02.022